Urge incontinence — involves a strong, sudden need to urinate followed by instant bladder contraction and involuntary loss of urine. You don’t have enough time between when you recognize the need to urinate and when you actually do urinate.

Bowel incontinence, a separate topic, is the inability to control the passage of stool.

Urinary Incontinence Considerations

Incontinence is most common among the elderly. Women are more likely than men to have urinary incontinence.

Infants and children are not considered incontinent, but merely untrained, up to the time of toilet training. Occasional accidents are not unusual in children up to age 6 years. Young (and sometimes teenage) girls may have slight leakage of urine when laughing.

Nighttime urination in children is normal until the age of 5 or 6.

Normal Urination

The ability to hold urine is dependent on having normal anatomy and a normally functioning urinary tract and nervous system. You must also possess the physical and psychological ability to recognize and appropriately respond to the urge to urinate.

The process of urination involves two phases:

The filling and storage phase

The emptying phase

Normally, during the filling and storage phase, the bladder begins to fill with urine from the kidneys. The bladder stretches to accommodate the increasing amounts of urine.

The first sensation of the urge to urinate occurs when approximately 200 ml (just under 1 cup) of urine is stored. A healthy nervous system will respond to this stretching sensation by alerting you to the urge to urinate, while also allowing the bladder to continue to fill.

The average person can hold approximately 350 to 550 ml (over 2 cups) of urine. The ability to fill and store urine properly requires a functional sphincter (the circular muscles around the opening of the bladder) and a stable, expandable bladder wall muscle (detrusor).

The emptying phase requires the ability of the detrusor muscle to appropriately contract to force urine out of the bladder. At the same time, your body must be able to relax the sphincter to allow the urine to pass out of the body.

Urinary Incontinence Common Causes

Incontinence may be sudden and temporary, or ongoing and long-term. Causes of sudden or temporary incontinence include:

Urinary tract infection or inflammation

Prostate infection or inflammation

Stool impaction from severe constipation, causing pressure on the bladder

Side effects of medications (such as diuretics, tranquilizers, some cough and cold remedies, certain antihistamines for allergies, and antidepressants)

Increased urine amounts, like with poorly controlled diabetes

Pregnancy

Weight gain

Short-term bedrest — for example, when recovering from surgery

Mental confusion

Urinary Incontinence Causes that may be more long-term:

Spinal injuries

Urinary tract anatomical abnormalities

Neurological conditions like multiple sclerosis or stroke

Weakness of the sphincter, the circular muscles of the bladder responsible for opening and closing it; this can happen following prostate surgery in men, or vaginal surgery in women

Pelvic prolapse in women — falling or sliding of the bladder, urethra, or rectum into the vaginal space, often related to having had multiple pregnancies and deliveries

Large prostate in men

Depression or Alzheimer’s disease

Nerve or muscle damage after pelvic radiation

Bladder cancer

Bladder spasms

Urinary Incontinence Home Care

See your doctor for an initial evaluation and to come up with a treatment plan. Treatment options vary, depending on the cause and type of incontinence you have. Fortunately, there are many things you can do to help manage incontinence.

The following methods are used to strengthen the muscles of your pelvic floor:

Bladder retraining — this involves urinating on a schedule, whether you feel a need to go or not. In between those times, you try to wait to the next scheduled time. At first, you may need to schedule 1 hour intervals. Gradually, you can increase by 1/2 hour intervals until you are only urinating every 3-4 hours without leakage.

Kegel exercises — contract the pelvic floor muscles for 10 seconds, then relax them for 10 seconds. Repeat 10 times. Do these exercises 3 times per day. You can do Kegel exercises any time, any place.

To find the pelvic muscles when you first start Kegel exercises, stop your urine flow midstream. The muscles needed to do this are your pelvic floor muscles. DO NOT contract your abdominal, thigh, or buttocks muscles. And DO NOT overdo the exercises. This may tire the muscles out and actually worsen incontinence.

Two methods called biofeedback and electrical stimulation can help you learn how to perform Kegel exercises. Biofeedback uses electrodes placed on the pelvic floor muscles, giving you feedback about when they are contracted and when they are not. Electrical stimulation uses low-voltage electric current to stimulate the pelvic floor muscles. It can be done at home or at a clinic for 20 minutes every 1 to 4 days.

Biofeedback and electrical stimulation will no longer be necessary once you have identified the pelvic floor muscles and mastered the exercises on your own.

Vaginal cones enhance the performance of Kegel exercises for women. Other devices for incontinence are also available.

For leakage, wear absorbent pads or undergarments. There are many well-designed products that go completely unnoticed by anyone but you.

Avoid foods and drinks that may irritate your bladder like spicy foods, carbonated beverages, and citrus fruits and juices.

Keep blood sugars under good control if you have diabetes.

Your doctor may recommend medication or surgery, especially if home care measures are not helping or if your symptoms are getting worse.

Medications that may be prescribed include drugs that relax the bladder, increase bladder muscle tone, or strengthen the sphincter.

Surgery may be required to relieve an obstruction or deformity of the bladder neck and urethra. Uterine or pelvic suspension operations are sometimes needed in women. Men may require prostatectomy (removal of the prostate gland). Incontinence can sometimes be managed by artificial sphincters. These are synthetic cuffs that are surgically placed around the urethra to help retain urine.

If you have overflow incontinence or cannot empty your bladder completely, a catheter may be recommended. But using a catheter exposes you to potential infection.

Prevention

Performing Kegel exercises while you are pregnant and soon after delivery may help prevent incontinence related to childbirth.

Call your health care provider if

Discuss incontinence with your doctor. Gynecologists and urologists are the specialists most familiar with this condition. They can evaluate the causes and recommend treatment approaches.

Call 911 or go to an emergency room if any of the following accompany a sudden loss of urine control:

You are taking medications that may be causing incontinence. DO NOT adjust or stop any medications without talking to your doctor.

You are over 60 years old and your incontinence is new, especially if you are also having trouble with your memory or caring for yourself.

You have the urge to go often, but are only passing small amounts of urine.

Your bladder feels full even after you have just urinated.

Incontinence persists for more than 2 weeks even with exercises to strengthen your pelvic muscles.

What to expect at your health care provider’s office

Your doctor will take your medical history and perform a physical examination, with a focus on your abdomen, genitals, pelvis, rectum, and neurologic system.

Medical history questions may include:

How long has incontinence been a problem for you?

How many times does this happen each day?

Are you aware of the need to urinate before you leak?

Are you immediately aware that you have passed urine?

Are you wet most of the day?

Do you wear protective garments in case of accidents? How often?

Do you avoid social situations in case of accidents?

Have you had urinary tract infections in the past? Do you think that you may have one now?

Is it more difficult to control your urine when you cough, sneeze, strain, or laugh?

Is it more difficult to control your urine when running, jumping, or walking?

Is your incontinence worse when sitting up or standing?

Are you constipated? For how long?

Is there anything you do to reduce or prevent accidents?

Have you ever been treated for this condition before? Did it help?

Have you tried pelvic floor exercises (Kegel)? Do they help?

What procedures, surgeries, or injuries have you had?

What medications do you take?

Do you drink coffee? How much?

Do you drink alcohol? How much?

Do you smoke? How much each day?

Do you have diabetes or a family history of diabetes?

Do you have any other symptoms?

Diagnostic tests that may be performed include:

Urinalysis

Urine culture to check for infection if indicated

Cystoscopy (inspection of the inside of the bladder)

Urodynamic studies (tests to measure pressure and urine flow)

Uroflow (to measure pattern of urine flow)

Post void residual (PVR) to measure amount of urine left after urination

Other tests may be performed to rule out pelvic weakness as the cause of the incontinence. One such test is called the Q-tip test. This test involves measurement of the change in the angle of the urethra when it is at rest and when it is straining. An angle change of greater than 30 degrees often indicates significant weakness of the muscles and tendons that support the bladder.

Urinary Incontinence References

American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists. Urinary incontinence in women. Obstet Gynecol. 2005; 105(6): 1533-1545.

Update Date: 2007

[Article from the MedLine Plus Medical Encyclopedia of the US National Library of Medicine and the National Institutes of Health.]

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